Linked Open Data native cataloguing and archival description
ID: 5004898
ISSN: 2038-1026
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Information
DESCRIPTION
P. 91-104
NOTE
- In the last years cultural heritage institutions have radically changed the way they publish their data. Publishing Linked Open Data (LOD) offers many advantages, in terms of innovation, visibility, and engagement with patrons. New data are served along with legacy services and data, via dedicated interfaces that allow developers and Digital Humanists to access specialised information. However, Linked data are living entities that change over time and require expensive curatorial activities, and should not be misaligned with respect to original data. To cope with this problem, several LOD-native cataloguing systems have been created. In this article an overview of current projects for LOD-native cataloguing is provided. Projects and systems are analysed with respect to related problems and benefits. [Publisher's Text]
KEYWORDS
- Linked Open Data; Library Linked data; Semantic Web; Crowdsourcing
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In this issue
- The Paris Principles 60 years later : conversation with Diego Maltese
- Open to whom : the Open science in the quest for readers
- Taking the Library of Congress CIP Program into the Future with PrePub Book Link
- Citizen science : one of the eight pillars of open science identified by the European Union
- Foundations of the information science : history and contemporary theories
- Encyclopedias and encyclopedism in the era of the Web.
- Linked Open Data native cataloguing and archival description
- Metadata profiles for interoperability : the E-ARK specifications for e-archiving
- The application of RDA to archive s: criticalities and advantages of using the universal metadata standard : the case of Galileo Chini Archive
- Library Politics: a missing link in Library and Information Science : some considerations about the recent Lectio magistralis by Claudia Lux.
- «Che vi sia ciascun lo dice, dove sia nessun lo sa» : discussions on Italian cataloging terminology at the turn of the 20th and 21st centuries
- The Origins of Bibliographic Control of cartographic resources
- Library as a Research Support System for AHSS Doctoral Students : Impact of Marital Status and Gender on Researchers